That’s the question I raised in my last post. I just finished reading Karen Le Billon’s book French Kids Eat Everything and I was responding to her point that French kids don’t snack as much as American kids do. According to Le Billon, French children (even very young ones) snack only once a day, sometime in the afternoon.

In contrast, American average nearly 3 snacks per day. Some kids snack more frequently.

As a very recently reformed snacker, I’m conflicted on the pros and cons of eating between meals.

I gave up snacking only a week or so ago (and today has already been a bust). Le Billon's got me thinking.

No matter you think about snacking, though, the reality is this: Half (or more) of our kids’ daily eating opportunities, and more than ¼ of their daily calories, come from snacks. It matters what we teach them.

As Le Billon points out, and I agree, the jury is still out on the number of times people need to eat during the day.

There’s plenty of research that shows that eating frequently throughout the day reduces your chances of becoming overweight. Unfortunately, there’s also plenty of research that counters this too.

And, there are perplexing problems associated with this research. For instance, it's not so clear that eating more frequently throughout the day provides a measure of protection against becoming overweight.

Many overweight people skip meals in order to reduce their calorie consumption. Thus, some researchers speculate that it might not be that meal frequency predicts obesity, rather weight status might predict how often people eat.

Despite the persistent belief that snacking is a healthy habit, the evidence points in the opposite direction.

The more our kids snack, the worse they eat.

Today’s children typically take in 168 morecalories from snacks than they did in 1977. (Does that mean kids are hungrier—168 calories hungrier—at snack time than they used to be?)

Contrary to popular wisdom, kids don’t compensate for snacking by eating smaller meals. Kids 2-6 years old have added 182 calories per day to their diet since 1977, with no corresponding increase in physical activity.

The American Academy of Pediatrics doesn’t seem to have a policy on the number of snacks kids should consume during the day.

The AAP might have a policy, but I can't find one. (If anyone out there knows of one, please pass it on.)

However, I did find this recommendation:

"Limit snacking during sedentary behavior or in response to boredom and particularly restrict use of sweet/sweetened particularly restrict use of sweet/sweetened beverages as snacks (eg, juice, soda, sports drinks)”

Reader Comments (11)

Dina: I love your blog and find it is the wisdom that is missing in this "information" society that we currently live in. I think the pros and cons of snacking should be weighed with the word appropriate. It is appropriate to snack when you are really hungry and lunch is still 2 hours away and the food you are eating is stuff you would normally eat anyway. On the other hand, it is inappropriate to snack when you aren't hungry, when you've just eaten or when lunch is only a few minutes away or because you just walked into the coffee room at work and found a half finished black forest cake calling you. We keep talking about WHAT people eat. We need to change the conversation, as you have, on how we eat. It is about being internally focused, rather than externally.

Thanks for this interesting discussion. One thing that helps at our house for 4 and 6 year olds (and their mama!) is that if wee have a snack it is a vegetable plus a glass of water. Mini cucumber, a carrot, sliced peppers, etc.

This never seems to ruin the appetite for the meal to come, and then the meal vegetable is almost a "bonus" and they are more willing to experiment.

Love this, I have basically stopped offering snacks at all as I find it makes my kids eat way less at meal times. Usually when they ask for a snack the next meal is less than 1 hour away anyway so I just ask them to wait.

Dina, wow. I just discovered you, and your site (by way of the Free Range Parenting site)!

I love this post, here (Do Kids Need to Snack?). Along with many other posts of yours that I have been reading this morning.

This idea you included (above) is particularly interesting to me: "Changing the conversation from nutrition to habits". Yes!

I also liked what Annette said, in her comment above, regarding making the distinction between choices that are appropriate vs. inappropriate. And being internally focused, versus externally focused!

Lastly, Nicole mentioned in her comment above that if she serves a snack, it is a vegetable. I wish we could change our concept of "snack", along these lines. I mean, a few slices of cucumber is very different from a bag of Doritos.

I don't know about you guys, but back when I was a kid, a half of an apple was an afternoon "snack". A bag of potato or corn chips was a "special occassion" food! It seems like we've gotten so off-kilter with this idea that cookies, chips and pop are "snacks" - for regular/daily consumption.

Welcome! I'm glad you're enjoying my site. I agree with you that back when I was a kid, an apple was a snack and chips were occasional treats. But, then, that was before the explosion of "snack" foods and the "snack" aisle in the grocery store.

Also, not having a "snack" teaches kids the important concept of delaying of gratification, a concept sorely missing in most children's upbringing these days, and essential to development of age appropriate attention span among other behaviors. In my own experience, there is no justification for snacks between meals, period. It breeds bad life habits for anyone, child or adult.

I agree with you and admire your hard line on snacks. I don't think it would work for most families, who see snacks as vital, but I'm glad for everyone to hear that it's possible to live without snacks.

Just came across your website and think this is great advice. The problem I've run into is the snacking habits of others. When at home, I give my daughter a small mid-morning snack to tide her over till lunch (maybe an applesauce or some fruit.) It works great and she eagerly eats almost whatever I present her at lunch time. My friends, however, seem convinced that their kids should graze from a snack buffet all day long...and my child is happy to oblige and eat from their buffet of sugar-sweetened and salt/MSG-laden junk whenever we have playdates. My daughter is only 1-1/2 so I feel I can't just tell her "no" and not allow her to eat when all the other kids are eating. She has had meltdowns over being denied goldfish crackers. In fact, if we are out playing somewhere and she sees food, she becomes obsessed by it, which I think is due to the fact that other kids always have hyper-palatable processed garbage that we do not eat at home.

What would you suggest in this situation, other than making new friends?

The problem you are having is quite common, so I've decided to answer more fully in a blog post (or two), probably next week. However, there are two separate issues embedded in your question. First, how to handle the food problem. Second, how to handle the behavioral problem. The short answer to the first is: start thinking about proportion. Plan to let your daughter have some junk at playdates but make the rest of the day healthy. Over time, give your daughter choices about when she has her junk. The short answer to the second question is: teach your daughter that meltdowns or tantrums don't work. I'll give specifics in my post.